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Local Government and Administration in the Democratic Republic of Vietnam since 1954 (Part I)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 February 2009
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When the Geneva agreements of July 1954 at Jast brought a measure of peace back to Indo-China, the Viet-Minh régime found itself in legal and recognised possession of that section of the country which lay north of the seventeenth parallel and which is officially known today as the Democratic Republic of Vietnam. By then, part of this area, comprising the Viet-Minh's war-zones I, II, III and most of IV, thirty-three provinces in all, had already long been held by Ho Chi Minh's troops and in much of it a semblance of the new order's system of local government had been in regular operation for some years back. In a good deal of the rest, clandestine and fragmented centres of rebel control had perilously co-existed throughout the war with the old administration maintained at great cost by the French authorities. Finally, in many places, particularly the urban concentrations, no appreciable degree of Viet-Minh influence had managed to last out the conflict.
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References
1 For an analysis of the Viet-Minh's system of local government and administration during the period 1945–54, see the author's “Local Government and Administration in North Vietnam, 1945–54,” The China Quarterly, No. 10 (04–06 1962), pp. 174–204Google Scholar, and the literature cited therein.
2 Vide Arturov, O. A. (ed.), Demokraticheskaya Respublika Vietnam, Konstitutsiya, Zakonodatelnye Akty, Dokumenty (Democratic Republic of Vietnam, Constitution, Legislative Acts, Documents) (Moscow: 1955)Google Scholar, for the text of most of these enactments.
3 Cf. Voevodin, L. D., in Voevodin, L. D., Zlatopolskii, D. L., Kuprits, N. Ya., Gosudarst-vennoe Pravo Stran Narodnoi Demokratti (State Law of Countries of People's Democracy) (Moscow: 1960), p. 525Google Scholar: “With the end of the war, the role of the representative organs, constituting the political basis of the republic, not only was fully rehabilitated, but propitious conditions were also created for the expansion of the scope of their activity.”
4 Text in Pravda, 09 23, 1954Google Scholar; Arturov, O. A. (ed.), op. clt., pp. 147–148Google Scholar. See also Arturov, O. A., “Gosudarstvennyi Stroi Demokraticheskoi Respubliki Vietnam” (“State Structure of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam”), Sovetskoe Gosudarstvo i Pravo, 1954, No. 7, p. 47.Google Scholar
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10 Mazaev, A. G., “Reshenie Natsionalnogo Voprosa v Demokraticheskoi Respublike Vietnam” (“Solution of the National Question in the Democratic Republic of Vietnam”), in Demokraticheskaya Respublika Vietnam, 1945–1960 (Democratic Republic of Vietnam, 1945–1960) (Moscow, 1960), p. 156.Google Scholar
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14 Text in Cong Bao, 06 15, 1955Google Scholar, No. 10; Osnovnye Normativnye Akty, pp. 43–52.Google Scholar
15 Art. 9 noted that in the absence of a doctor, the fact of insanity could be established by the testimony of the residents of the hamlet or village and sanctioned by the district authorities
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17 Now back at fifteen days for the decisions of the zonal and district councils, and five for the communal councils (Art. 22).
18 See, for instance, Merzlyakov, N., “Organy Vlasti Demokraticheskogo Vietnama” (“Organs of Authority of Democratic Vietnam”), Soviety Deputatov Trudyashchikhsya, 1958, No. 1, p. 77Google Scholar, describing a public meeting of the administrative committee of the Viet-Bac Autonomous Zone devoted to a discussion of the question of combating poor crops and measures for increasing the output of agricultural produce, to which were invited the chairmen of the people's councils of villages of the zone and leaders of social organisations.
19 Merzlyakov, N. S., op. cit. (note 6), pp. 67–68.Google Scholar
20 Duong-Cong-Hoat, , op, cit., pp. 2, 22Google Scholar; Mazaev, A. G., op. cit. (note 10), p. 156Google Scholar; Budanov, A. G., op. cit. (note 12), p. 60.Google Scholar
21 Text in Cong Bao, 08 15, 1956, No. 23Google Scholar; Osnavnye Normativnye Akty, pp. 53–58Google Scholar. The decree and the Resolution were based on the proposal of the Council of Ministers of June 6, 1956.
For data on the population and national composition of the Viet-Bac Zone, see Merzlyakov, N. S., op. cit. (note 6), p. 69Google Scholar; Mazaev, A. G., op. cit. (note 10), p. 157Google Scholar; Budanov, A. G., op. cit. (note 12), p. 60.Google Scholar
22 Cong Bao, 07 11, 1956, No. 11Google Scholar; Osnovnye Normativnye Akty, pp. 59–62.Google Scholar
23 Budanov, A. G., op. cit. (note 12), p. 60.Google Scholar
24 Ibid.; Mazaev, A. G., op. cit. (note 10), p. 156, fn. 36.Google Scholar
25 Cf. Arturov, O. A., in Kotok, V. F. (ed.), Gosudarstvennoe pravo zarubezhnykh sotsialisticheskikh stran (State Law of Foreign Socialist Countries) (Moscow, 1957), p. 414Google Scholar: “The post-war period (1954–57) was marked by the consolidation of all organs of democratic authority, of their ties with the masses and their unity in the system of a centralised peoples' authority, the transition from war to peace, the shift of the centre of gravity from the village to the city, the transition from fragmentation to centralisation.”